OverviewReviewCastProduction CreditsAwards
   
Watch the trailer
Donnie Darko
Plot Synopsis by Mark Deming

Donnie (Jake Gyllenhaal) is a bright and charming high-school student who also has a dark and willfully eccentric side; he does little to mask his contempt for many of his peers and enjoys challenging the authority of the adults around him. Donnie is also visited on occasion by Frank, a monstrous six-foot rabbit that only Donnie can see who often urges him to perform dangerous and destructive pranks. Late one night, Frank leads Donnie out of his home to inform him that the world will come to an end in less than a month; moments later, the engine of a jet aircraft comes crashing through the ceiling of Donnie's room, making him think there might be something to Frank's prophesies after all. The rest of Donnie's world is only marginally less bizarre, as he finds himself dealing with his confused parents (Mary McDonnell and Holmes Osborne), his college-age sister (Maggie Gyllenhaal), his perplexed analyst (Katherine Ross), a rebellious English teacher (Drew Barrymore), a sleazy self-help expert (Patrick Swayze), and the new girl at school who is attracted by Donnie's quirks (Jena Malone). Donnie Darko was the first feature film from writer and director Richard Kelly; Drew Barrymore, who plays teacher Karen Pomeroy, also lent her support to the project as executive producer. A director's cut played in select theaters on a limited basis in the summer of 2004, featuring original music cues and trimmed scenes originally in Kelly's first cut of the film.

» View DVD Releases
Links to other sites
Official Site
Similar Works
Heathers  (1989, Michael Lehmann)
Welcome to the Dollhouse  (1995, Todd Solondz)
The Doom Generation  (1995, Gregg Araki)
The Butcher Boy  (1997, Neil Jordan)
Nowhere  (1997, Gregg Araki)
The Ice Storm  (1997, Ang Lee)
Ghost World  (2001, Terry Zwigoff)
American Beauty  (1999, Sam Mendes)
Magnolia  (1999, Paul Thomas Anderson)
The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys  (2002, Peter Care)
Other Related Works
 Features:    The Evil Dead  (1983, Sam Raimi)